Using jax-rs, I'm not sure how to manually unmarshal JSON into my custom Java objects.
From my browser I'm sending a simple put request with the following JSON:
{"myDate":{"dayOfMonth":23, "monthOfYear":7, "year":2011}}
On the server I have a BlahResource which consumes this JSON and prints out the Java object properties:
@Component
@Scope("request")
@Path("/blah")
@Consumes("application/json")
@Produces("application/json")
public class BlahResource {
@PUT
public String putBlah(Blah blah) {
System.out.println("Value: " + blah.getMyDate().getMonthOfYear() + "/" + blah.getMyDate().getDayOfMonth() + "/" + blah.getMyDate().getYear());
return "{}";
}
}
Here's the source code for Blah:
public class Blah {
private LocalDate myDate;
public Blah()
{
}
public void setMyDate(LocalDate myDate)
{
this.myDate = myDate;
}
public LocalDate getMyDate()
{
return myDate;
}
}
The problem is Blah.myDate is a Joda-time LocalDate class which does not have setters for dayOfMonth, monthOfYear, and year. So for instance, when I run this the following exception is thrown:
Jul 10, 2011 8:40:33 AM
com.sun.jersey.spi.container.ContainerResponse mapMappableContainerException
SEVERE: The exception contained within MappableContainerException could not
be mapped to a response, re-throwing to the HTTP container
org.codehaus.jackson.map.exc.UnrecognizedPropertyException:
Unrecognized field "dayOfMonth"
This makes perfect sense to me. The problem is I have no idea how to write some sort of adapter so that whenever the type LocalDate is encountered, my adapter class is used to convert the JSON into a LocalDate.
Ideally, I want to do something like this:
public class LocalDateAdapter {
public LocalDate convert(String json)
{
int dayOfMonth = (Integer)SomeJsonUtility.extract("dayOfMonth");
int year = (Integer)SomeJsonUtility.extract("year");
int monthOfYear = (Integer)SomeJsonUtility.extract("monthOfYear");
return new LocalDate(year, monthOfYear, dayOfMonth);
}
}
UPDATE
I've now tried two methods, neither seem to be working.
1) Using ObjectMapper
It seems all I need to do is get a handle on the ObjectMapper and add a deserializer. So I created this provider. To my surprise, I named my dserializer: LocalDateDeserializer and when I had eclipse auto-fix imports I was shocked to see that Jackson already provides an extension for Joda. When I start the server, it finds the provider, but otherwise it seems this code is never invoked.
import javax.ws.rs.ext.ContextResolver;
import javax.ws.rs.ext.Provider;
import org.codehaus.jackson.Version;
import org.codehaus.jackson.map.ObjectMapper;
import org.codehaus.jackson.map.ext.JodaDeserializers.LocalDateDeserializer;
import org.codehaus.jackson.map.module.SimpleModule;
import org.joda.time.LocalDate;
import org.springframework.stereotype.Component;
@Component
@Provider
public class ObjectMapperProvider implements ContextResolver<ObjectMapper> {
@Override
public ObjectMapper getContext(Class<?> type) {
ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper();
SimpleModule testModule = new SimpleModule("MyModule", new Version(1, 0, 0, null))
.addDeserializer(LocalDate.class, new LocalDateDeserializer());
mapper.registerModule(testModule);
return mapper;
}
}
2) The second method I tried is to specify a @JsonDeserialize annotation directly on the field.
@JsonDeserialize(using = CustomDateDeserializer.class)
private LocalDate myDate;
This also didn't seem to be invoked.
public class CustomDateDeserializer extends JsonDeserializer<LocalDate> {
@Override
public LocalDate deserialize(JsonParser parser, DeserializationContext context) throws IOException, JsonProcessingException
{
return new LocalDate(2008, 2, 5);
}
}
I'm not sure what to do. This seems like a very basic problem.
UPDATE 2
I'm considering dropping Jackson for using deserialization (even though it works fairly well with Jersey).
I was already using flexjson for serialization, and it seems flexjson is just as simple for deserialization. All these other libraries have some much abstraction and unnecessary complexity.
In Flexjson, I just had to implement ObjectFactory:
class LocalDateTransformer implements ObjectFactory {
@Override
public Object instantiate(ObjectBinder context, Object value, Type targetType, Class targetClass)
{
HashMap map = (HashMap)value;
int year = (Integer)map.get("year");
int monthOfYear = (Integer)map.get("monthOfYear");
int dayOfMonth = (Integer)map.get("dayOfMonth");
return new LocalDate(year, monthOfYear, dayOfMonth);
}
}
It looks surprisingly like the "adapter" class I originally posted! And my resource method now becomes:
@PUT
public String putBlah(String blahStr) {
Blah blah = new JSONDeserializer<Blah>().use(LocalDate.class, new LocalDateTransformer()).deserialize(blahStr, Blah.class);
}
Blahwith JAXB annotations and see what exactly Jersey prints out as JSON? See stackoverflow.com/questions/10593543/… – Jin Kwon Jun 26 '12 at 15:43